Glenn Adams wrote:
> Second, I am not saying "they shouldn't be specified". I'm saying they
> (same-origin mandate) should not be specified in WOFF or CSS3-FONTS. These
> are not the correct place to mandate or enforce such restrictions.
I agree that a separate module would be better; the policy and
technology rarely mix well in the same specifiction (which is why we
ultimately dropped '!legal' in CSS, now that I think of it). A
separate module has been proposed before:
http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-webfonts-wg/2011Jan/0037.html
Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
> Same-origin restrictions have nothing to do with content protection,
> as you can trivially just download the font yourself (assuming it's
> publically accessible) and host it on your own server.
I agree that SOR is not a crucial part of the "protection" that WOFF
provides. Therefore, I don't see why creating a separate module should
be controversial.
I can see that bandwidth leaching is an issue. However, I don't think
we will see sites leeching off others at a big scale. Leeching is
simply too fragile.
Cheers,
-h&kon
HÃ¥kon Wium Lie CTO Â°Ã¾eÂ®Âª
howcome@opera.com http://people.opera.com/howcome